The global technical outage that appears to be related to software problems at cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike and Microsoft today affected the operation of airports, airlines, banks, media and dozens of other businesses around the world.

Here is a list of the most important problems reported by sector:

AIRPORTS, AIRLINES

Airports and airlines around the world warned of flight delays and cancellations or switched to manual check-in.

– All flights were temporarily suspended at Berlin airport, a spokesman told Reuters. Eurowings, a subsidiary of Lufthansa, has announced that it is suspending domestic flights as well as flights to and from Britain until 3pm.

– Spanish airport management company Aena reported an “incident” in the computer network, while problems also occurred at Lisbon airport, Portugal’s largest. Amsterdam Schiphol Airport and Brussels Airport were also reportedly affected.

– Dutch airline KLM said it could not operate flights on Friday and suspended most of its operations. Air France, KLM’s parent company, also said its operations were disrupted.

– Turkish Airlines was experiencing problems with ticketing, check-in and reservations, it said in a post on Platform X. Budapest said several airline check-in systems were down.

– Major US carriers including American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and United Airlines suspended flights Friday morning, citing communication problems. American Airlines later said service had been restored. Frontier and Spirit also canceled grounding guidelines.

– Ryanair said it had canceled a small number of flights.

– A SAS spokesman said the Scandinavian airline expected delays.

– Qantas, Australia’s national airline, and Sydney Airport said flights were continuing as normal, albeit with some delays.

– Swiss air traffic control company Skyguide said it has temporarily reduced capacity in Swiss airspace by 30%.

– About 90% of flights at Gatwick and Stansted airports in London were canceled or delayed.

– Indian carriers including SpiceJet, Indigo, Akasa Air, Vistara, Air India and Air India Express also faced problems.

– Philippines’ Cebu Air said it is experiencing technical issues and system outages due to the Microsoft issue.

FINANCIAL SECTOR

– Australia’s largest bank, the Commonwealth Bank, said previous issues affecting direct transfers via PayID have been resolved. Services such as Netbank, CommBank app, CommBiz, merchant payments and ATMs were available.

– Several major oil and gas trading desks in London and Singapore were struggling to execute trades, six industry sources told Reuters. The Singapore Exchange announced that some services were momentarily affected.

– The services of South African banks Capitec Bank and Absa have been fully restored after their outage.

– The London Stock Exchange’s news and data platform has temporarily shut down, affecting user access and disrupting financial markets. It then reported that the technical problems with exchange rates and forward rates had been resolved and services had been restored.

– Some brokerages in India were facing technical difficulties.

– German insurer Allianz said it was experiencing a major outage that was affecting employees’ ability to log on to their computers.

– Some German banks were facing disruptions, a spokesman for the financial services association Deutsche Kreditwirtschaft said, without giving details.

– Barclays said its Smart Investor digital investment platform was affected.

– Brazilian bank Bradesco said its digital platforms were unavailable today.

MEDIA

-UK Sky News has resumed broadcasting after a long break, but some of its services were unavailable.

– Australia’s state broadcaster ABC said it was experiencing a “major outage”, without specifying the reason.

– Sky News Australia’s regular schedule has been interrupted.

HEALTH AND SAFETY SERVICES

– England’s NHS said there was a system failure in booking medical appointments and patient records, but emergency services were not affected.

– Several hospitals in the Netherlands were forced to limit their operations, the Dutch news agency ANP reported.

– Police in Victoria, Australia, said some internal systems were affected but emergency services were operating normally.

– Copenhagen’s fire service told Platform X that it was experiencing problems receiving automatically transmitted fire alarms and urged citizens to call 112 in the event of a fire.

– Two hospitals in the German cities of Lübeck and Kiel have canceled elective procedures scheduled for today.

– Not-for-profit hospital chain Mass General Brigham said the outage affected many of its systems. Due to the severity of the problem, he has canceled all scheduled non-emergency surgeries and medical appointments for today.

– Quest Diagnostics said its patient services and customer contact teams were operating at reduced capacity and patients should be patient until they are served.

– Lab testing provider Labcorp said the outage was affecting some of its systems, its call center and the delivery of results to doctors and patients.

SHIPPING, TRANSPORTATION

– Shipping giant Maersk said some of its terminals were affected but were back to full operation within hours.

– FedEx said it experienced significant disruptions to its networks and warned of possible delays in package deliveries. Rival UPS also warned of possible delays.

– Railroad company Union Pacific said the problem in CrowdStrike’s software had “consequences” on its network, but backup protocols helped it communicate with its employee groups.

OTHERS

– A spokesman for Germany’s interior ministry said “vital” infrastructure was affected.

– The computer network at the New Zealand Parliament was affected.

– Australia’s Telstra Group was experiencing outages in some of its systems, a spokesman for the telecommunications company told Reuters.

– The Baltic Hub container terminal in the Polish city of Gdansk said it was affected by the global outage in Microsoft systems and is working to resolve the issue.

– The organizing committee of the Paris Olympics said its activities had slowed, but the impact was limited and ticket sales were unaffected.

– The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the United Arab Emirates said that its electronic systems are working normally again.

– Maruti Suzuki, India’s largest carmaker, said it has temporarily halted production and shipments. It continued to operate and did not expect any further repercussions from the incident.

– The Port of Houston reported problems at two terminals. All systems were back up later.

– US telecommunications giant Verizon initially said “global issues” could affect its services, but the network was operating normally.

– The Manchester United football team reported via the X platform that they were forced to postpone today’s planned ticket sale.

– Starbucks said pre-order and mobile payment features were temporarily down.